2013/09/12

Uki Uki * Midnight

Uki Uki * Midnight

Let's turn off the light and charge ourselves with energy.
Now seems to begin... [[a hilarious midnight.]]
Let's write "serious" and read it as "really".
It's time to get hyper under the sparkling mirror ball.

Let's turn off the light and charge ourselves with energy.
Now seems to begin... a hilarious midnight.
Let's write "serious" and read it as "really".
It's time to get hyper under the sparkling mirror ball.

[[Hilarious midnight.]]

[[Hilarious midnight.]]
[[Midnight, midnight, midnight.]]
[Midnight.]

Hey, boys and girls,
eating lots of the sweets and the dreams,
now jump out
of my house! It's a party time.

I'm becoming sleepy and I feel full.
But now is coming... the climax.
My eyes get bleary, I rub them, and "Really?"
Let's get hyper! [[Glittering bright!]]

Let's turn off the light and charge ourselves with energy.
Now seems to begin... [[a hilarious midnight.]]
Let's write "serious" and read it as "really".
It's time to get hyper under the sparkling mirror ball.

ROMAJI LYRIC AND NOTES ARE BELOW.

[i] About To Write "Serious" And Read It As "Really"

You can understand this lyric even if you ignore this phrase.

"To write X and read it as Y" is an idiom. Japanese people usually write "煙草"(lit. kemuri kusa; smoke grass) and read it as "tabako" (= cigarette), and there are many such cases. In a famous violent manga "Hokuto no Ken" (1983-88), the author wrote "強敵" (strong enemy) and read it as "とも" (mate) to express that they felt some sympathy while they fought to death. There are also many such cases.

Then, "honki" means "serious" and "maji" means "serious" or "real". This song's "maji" is attached to "age-poyo", and "maji age-poyo" sounds like "getting really hyper". The phrase "honki to kaite" (= to write "serious" and (read it as) ) is omissible. I guess the lyric writer attached it to emphasize something like the will to get hyper.

[ii] About Dried Squid and Cute Sweets

In the section starting with "Geso" (Squid), the latter two lines are the words of other girl(s) than the girl who likes dried squid. Actually MOAMETAL said something like the former two lines, and SU-METAL & YUIMETAL said something like the latters. In [a radio program], they talked about their party with cute sweets and dried squid scattered on the bed at the night of their trip. Someone, hearing of this episode, must have directed the lyric writer to incorporate it.

Uki Uki * Midnight

Romaji Lyric

English Translation

Notes

Denki o keshite genki o chaaji.

Let's turn off the light and charge ourselves with energy.

1

Korya hajimaru yo, [[u-ki-u-ki middonaito.]]

Now seems to begin... [[a hilarious midnight.]]

2

Sorosoro honki to kaite "maji"

Let's write "serious" and read it as "really".

[i]

age-poyoo de pika pika miraabooru.

It's time to get hyper under the sparkling mirror ball.

3

Geso geso. Ika-geso ga tabetai.

Squid, squid. I want to eat squid arms.

4, [ii]

Atashi wa surume-ha nano.

I prefer dried squid.

5

Yada yada. Ojichan mitai.

No, no. It makes you like a middle-aged man.

Kyawaii okashi ni shiyoo YO

Why don't we choose cute sweets?

6

Shoonen shoojo yo

Hey, boys and girls,

okashi to yume ippai tsumete

packing lots of your sweets and your dreams,

ima atsumare

now gather

atashi-n-chi! Paarinait.

in my house! It's a party night.

7

Anata to watashi. [[YOUAND ME.]]

You and me. [[You and me.]]

Koyoi wa tanoshii... [[UKI UKI MIDNIGHT.]]

Tonight is a cheerful... [[hilarious midnight.]]

Mongen [[CLOSING TIME]]

Curfew, [[Closing time,]]

nononon. [[NO WAY.]]

no, no, non. [[no way!]]

Mada mada tsuzuku yo. [[KINKIRARIIIIINNNNN!]]

It continues still more. [[Glittering bright!]]

Denki o keshite genki o chaaji.

Let's turn off the light and charge ourselves with energy.

Korya hajimaru yo, u-ki-u-ki middonaito.

Now seems to begin... a hilarious midnight.

Sorosoro honki to kaite "maji"

Let's write "serious" and read it as "really".

age-poyoo de pika pika miraabooru.

It's time to get hyper under the sparkling mirror ball.

[[Uki uki middonaito.]]

[[Hilarious midnight.]]

[[Uki uki middonaito.]]

[[Hilarious midnight.]]

[[middonaito middonaito middonaito.]]

[[Midnight, midnight, midnight.]]

[Middonaito.]

[Midnight.]

(s)

Shoonen shoojo yo

Hey, boys and girls,

okashi to yume ippai tabete

eating lots of the sweets and the dreams,

ima tobidase

now jump out

8

atashi-n-chi! Paaritai.

of my house! It's a party time.

Anata to watashi. [[YOUAND ME.]]

You and me. [[You and me.]]

Koyoi wa tanoshii... [[UKI UKI MIDNIGHT.]]

Tonight is a cheerful... [[hilarious midnight.]]

Mongen [[CLOSING TIME]]

Curfew, [[Closing time,]]

nononon. [[NO WAY.]]

no, no, non. [[no way!]]

Mada mada tsuzuku yo. [[KINKIRARIIIIINNNNN!]]

It continues still more. [[Glittering bright!]]

Nemuku natte kita. Onaka mo ippai.

I'm becoming sleepy and I feel full.

Demo kore kara ga... kuraimakkusu.

But now is coming... the climax.

Shobo shobo omeme kosutte, "Maji?"

My eyes get bleary, I rub them, and "Really?"

9,10

Age-poyoo de [[Kinkirariin!]]

Let's get hyper! [[Glittering bright!]]

3

Denki o keshite genki o chaaji.

Let's turn off the light and charge ourselves with energy.

Korya hajimaru yo, [[u-ki-u-ki middonaito.]]

Now seems to begin... [[a hilarious midnight.]]

Sorosoro honki to kaite "maji"

Let's write "serious" and read it as "really".

age-poyoo de pika pika miraabooru.

It's time to get hyper under the sparkling mirror ball.

Notes

The enclosed phrase [---] marked with "(s)" is sung by SU-METAL (added on 2017 Mar. 17).

Maybe a while of darkness makes them get more excited when they see the sparkling mirror ball.

"Age" is gals' jargon, and it means something like getting/being "high / hyper / very excited". "Poyoo" (= poyo) has no meaning, and is attached only to add the cuteness.
I made up the structure of these two sentences. I can't analyze the original lines because the main verb that should come with "the sparkling mirror ball" (or "glittering bright") is missing.

"Geso" means the legs (or arms) of "ika" (= squid) or "tako" (= octopus) as food, but Japanese people don't eat other part of octopus, so "geso" is redundant for octopus, and "geso" refers to "ika-geso". Ika-geso are cooked in various ways.

"Surume" refers to dried squid. They are supplied as whole body, as shredded pieces, or as bunch of arms. Chewing surume and drinking sake is a traditional style of Japanese old-and-middle-aged men.
This line is literally "I am of the group preferring dried squid".

"Kyawaii" is a playful form of "kawaii". "Cute sweets" means the cookies, candies, etc. that are shaped or decorated in cute styles.

"Atashi-n-chi" is a contraction of "watashi no uchi".

Maybe they move to such a place as nearby park or river bank so that the neighbors' complaints won't disturb them.

"Shobo shobo" represents the state of bleary eyes. "Omeme" is a childish form of "me" (= eye).

Maybe the question mark is added to suggests that a sleepy girl asks others whether they really want to continue the party.

Thank you for infomation.In the CD take, SU-METAL also sang chuorus part (in slightly childish voice?) on those lines. I am not sure whether "Paaritai" is sung by YUIMETAL&MOAMETAL or by this SU-METAL.

No, it isn't. Probably it means "Team KOBAMETAL", and KOBAMETAL (KxBxMETAL) is the producer.Once in some magazine he said he makes up one tune from several parts of the tunes that some composers have offered on his order. But probably he only orders to make up them, and the arranger or someone else actually does it. Probably "TEAM K" is a name for these members.

Thank you for comment. I thought the feeling "uki uki" contains some kind of excitement and "cheerful" & "lighthearted" are not enough. I consulted my J-E dictionaries and found "merry & playful", "hilarious", "in high spirits", "having a frolic", etc. for Japanese "ukareru" (which roughly means being "uki uki").

I discovered that Stardust Review (スターダストレビュー) also has a song called UKI UKI Midnight: youtube com/watch?v=mMMDF_RIh_0It seems unlikely that that combination of Japanese and English words for a song title would be a total coincidence. But that doesn't mean it has any significance, it could have just been a phrase that was floating around which worked in conjunction with "Doki Doki Morning".

Thank you for information and sorry for late reply. I found Stardust Revue released the song in 1985 and they had the radio program called "Uki Uki Midnight" then. The staff of BABYMETAL might have known their radio program and the title "Doki Doki Morning" might possibly have been inspired from it.